|
|
|
|
|
by woutervdb
75 days ago
|
|
I think the key difference is the amount of data the service can offer when it is asked to do so by some legal entity. Signal famously claims to barely have any useful data to turn over when ordered to do so [1]. If some provider states they are pricacy-focused and protect your data from governments, but can still offer loads of your private data when ordered to, that damages their privacy claim. EDIT: "some provider like Proton" -> "some provider", never wanted to imply Proton specifically did or does this. [1] https://signal.org/blog/looking-back-as-the-world-moves-forw... |
|
"Loads" of private data? When has this allegedly happened or how would it technically even be possible?